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Alan Caruso shovels snow outside his house in Portland's Sellwood neighborhood Sunday morning. Caruso said he was getting prepared for Monday morning's drive to work in Beaverton. Road conditions steadily improved throughout the day on Sunday.
(Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian)

5:50 p.m.: TriMet has made gains in getting more routes in service and hopes to be at full strength for Monday's commute.

5:12 p.m.: Damage to a manhole cover means traffic on 99E in Canby will be mildly disrupted.

4:39 p.m.: Leah Treat, Portland's top transportation official, said main streets are "passable," but snow and icy conditions remain on secondary roads.

3:30 p.m.: TriMet's Green Line is back in operation with a limited number of trains. The trains are running every hour. Riders may still want to opt for bus line 72, which serves Southeast 82nd Avenue from the Clackamas Town Center to Northeast Killingsworth Street.

The transit agency emphasizes that riders should expect delays. About 20 MAX trains are operating at this hour.

8:07 a.m.: Gresham officials urge residents to stay off city roads. The storm "is not over yet, so we again want to urge people to stay off roads," said Fire Division Chief Scott Lewis. The city's emergency operation center was activated Thursday. Lewis also urged area residents to protect pipes from freezing. The city has prepared winter weather information for residents.